
Norway central bank cuts rates in surprise move
"The economic outlook is uncertain, but if the economy evolves broadly as currently projected, the policy rate will be reduced further in the course of 2025," Norges Bank said in a statement.
The Norwegian crown currency weakened to 11.55 against the euro by 0805 GMT, from 11.48 just before the announcement.
Norges Bank in May maintained its interest rate at 4.50%, the highest level since 2008, after it postponed in March a long-planned monetary easing due to an unexpected rise in consumer prices.
Of the 26 economists in the June 11-16 poll, 23 predicted Norges Bank's key interest rate would stay at 4.50% on Thursday, while three expected a cut to 4.25%.
"Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected," Norges Bank Governor Ida Wolden Bache said in a statement.
"A cautious normalisation of the policy rate will pave the way for inflation to return to target without restricting the economy more than necessary," she added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Services industry grows at fastest rate for 10 months as cost pressures ease
The UK's services sector expanded at its quickest rate for 10 months in June, as inflation pressures eased. The closely-watched S&P Global UK Services Purchasing Managers' Index report gave the industry a score of 52.8 for June, the best figure since August 2024 and above analyst forecasts of 51.3. Any number above 50 indicates the sector is growing, while any figure below denotes contraction. Companies surveyed said their output benefited from higher organic sales, 'generally improving' business and consumer spending, and marketing and promotional activity. Overall new work gained by service firms rose for the second time this year, although only marginally, while new orders increased at the fastest pace since last November, thanks to domestic demand. While input price inflation lingered, with 29 per cent of survey participants reporting higher cost burdens, the rate of cost inflation was the lowest for six months. However, service employment shrank for the ninth consecutive month, with anecdotal evidence pointing to greater payroll costs and an absence of pressure on business capacity. In early April, employers' National Insurance contributions went up from 13.8 per cent on annual salaries above £9,100 to 15 per cent on wages exceeding £5,000. The National Living Wage for workers aged 21 and over also went up by around 10 per cent to £12.21 per hour. Many major UK businesses have warned that the changes, which were originally announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in the Autumn Budget, will force them to cut jobs or avoid hiring new people. Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said the mix of falling employment and abating inflationary pressures 'leaves the door open' for the Bank of England (BoE) to cut interest rates next month. The BoE has reduced the UK base rate, which currently stands at 4.25 per cent, by 0.25 percentage points on four occasions in the past year. Its governor, Andrew Bailey, told CNBC earlier this week that 'the path of interest rates will continue to be gradually downwards'. S&P Global noted that the growth in average prices charged by service sector companies was the smallest in four-and-a-half years. Thomas Pugh, chief economist at RSM UK, said this 'will give some ammunition to the doves at the Bank of England, and makes a rate cut in August even more likely'.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Bank of England lends record 74 billion pounds in weekly repo
July 3 (Reuters) - The Bank of England allotted a record 74.225 billion pounds ($101.32 billion) in seven-day funds in its weekly short-term repo operation on Thursday, higher than a previous record of 72.782 billion pounds set last week. The central bank uses its short-term repo operations as a way to provide banks with reserves as it sells down its stockpile of government bonds bought under its quantitative easing programme. ($1 = 0.7325 pounds)


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Tanzania central bank cuts policy rate as it sees stable inflation
DAR ES SALAAM, July 3 (Reuters) - Tanzania's central bank lowered its benchmark interest rate (TZINTR=ECI), opens new tab by 25 basis points to 5.75% on Thursday, saying it expected inflation to remain stable below its medium-term target. The Bank of Tanzania targets inflation of 5%, and consumer inflation (TZCPIY=ECI), opens new tab has hovered around 3% since it launched its policy rate in January 2024. The bank had left the rate unchanged at its four previous monetary policy meetings. Governor Emmanuel Tutuba told a press conference that the bank's projections showed inflation would remain below target, helped by the onset of the harvest season and exchange rate stability. Tutuba said global risks had moderated on account of tariff negotiations between the U.S. and its major trading partners and the Monetary Policy Committee was confident on the outlook for the third quarter. The East African country's government sees economic growth rising to 6% this year, from 5.5% last year, helped by the start of electricity generation at the Julius Nyerere hydropower dam. President Samia Suluhu Hassan's administration has been pushing ahead with large-scale infrastructure projects like the dam and a railway network ahead of elections due in October.